James R. Rasband J. Reuben Clark Law School Brigham Young University Provo, Utah. Synopsis

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This paper will be published by the Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation in the Proceedings of the 63rd Annual Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Institute (forthcoming 2017) Chapter 21 STROKE OF THE PEN, LAW OF THE LAND? James R. Rasband J. Reuben Clark Law School Brigham Young University Provo, Utah Synopsis 21.01 Introduction 21.02 Executive Authority over the Public Lands 21.03 Can Monuments Be Abolished or Modified? [1] The Test for Presidential Executive Orders: The Youngstown Framework [2] Did Congress Expressly or Impliedly Delegate to the President the Authority to Revoke National Monuments? [3] Did Congress Expressly or Impliedly Delegate to the President the Authority to Modify or Diminish National Monuments? [a] Does the Antiquities Act Expressly Delegate the Authority to Diminish a Monument s Size? [b] Does the Antiquities Act Impliedly Delegate the Authority to Diminish a Monument s Size? [4] Modification Through Management 21.04 Conclusion 21-1

21-2 Mineral Law Institute 21.01 21.01 Introduction * ** With an increasingly partisan divide in Congress, 1 and with the Republicans in control of the House for the last six years of his presidency, 2 President Barack Obama turned more and more to executive power to pursue his agenda. This was true in a number of areas, 3 including with respect to the public lands. Perhaps the most prominent manifestation of this was his use of the Antiquities Act of 1906 (Antiquities Act), 4 which authorizes the president, in his discretion, to declare by public proclamation historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest that are situated upon the lands owned or controlled by the Federal Government to be national monuments. 5 President Obama proclaimed more national monuments covering more acres than any president in history. 6 As has often been the case historically, President Obama s proclamations drew strong protests from some in public land communities near the monuments and from many in the congressional delegations of * Cite as James R. Rasband, Stroke of the Pen, Law of the Land? 63 Rocky Mt. Min. L. Inst. 21-1 (2017). ** The author would like to thank Kathryn Brinton and Hyrum Bosserman for their stellar research assistance. 1 See Philip Bump, The Unprecedented Partisanship of Congress, Explained, Wash. Post (Jan. 13, 2016) (graphical depictions of increasing partisan divide as Democratic Party representatives have become more liberal on average and Republican Party representatives more conservative on average). 2 See Carl Hulse, Taking Control, G.O.P. Overhauls Rules in House, N.Y. Times (Jan. 5, 2011). 3 See James Surowiecki, The Perils of Executive Action, The New Yorker (Aug. 8 & 15, 2016) (noting the use of executive power to, among other things, commit the U.S. to the Paris Agreement on climate change, to institute the Clean Power Plan to reduce emissions, to restrict new energy exploration in the Arctic Ocean and new coal leases on government land, to cap many student-loan payments, and to tighten rules on gun sales ). 4 54 U.S.C. 320301 320303 (previously codified at 16 U.S.C. 431 433). 5 Id. 320301(a). For a brief overview of the Antiquities Act and the controversies it has spawned, see Carol Hardy Vincent, Cong. Research Serv., National Monuments and the Antiquities Act (CRS Report R41330 Sept. 7, 2016). 6 See Nat l Parks Conservation Ass n, Monuments Protected Under the Antiquities Act (Jan. 13, 2017), https://www.npca.org/resources/2658-monuments-protected-underthe-antiquities-act (providing downloadable lists of all monuments, including enlargements and diminishments by date, as well as total acres affected). President Obama proclaimed 29 national monuments. President Clinton proclaimed the second-most, with 19 national monuments. See id.; see also Keith Collins, Map: Obama Established More National Monuments than Any Other President, Quartz (Jan. 12, 2017) (providing maps and graphics on total acres designated as monuments). A significant part of the acreage proclaimed by President Obama came in the form of marine national monuments.

21.01 National Monument Designations 21-3 the states containing the monuments. 7 The frustration triggered calls to amend the Antiquities Act 8 and requests that President Donald Trump, by his own stroke of the pen, reverse President Obama s proclamations and terminate or modify the monuments. 9 The most prominent of these efforts, although certainly not the only one, 10 has been with the Bears Ears National Monument in Utah, which was proclaimed by President Obama a few short weeks before President Trump s inauguration. 11 Threats to abolish prior monuments are not new. Then vice-presidential nominee Dick Cheney, during the 2000 campaign, indicated that President Bill Clinton s monument decisions would be reviewed with an eye toward rescinding or diminishing monuments he had proclaimed. 12 Despite the requests and threats, however, no president has ever revoked a national monument. Several presidents have diminished the size of monuments but these diminishments have not been challenged. 13 Consequently, no court has had an opportunity to address whether the president has authority to revoke or diminish a monument proclaimed under the Antiquities Act. That may be about to change. 7 See James R. Rasband, The Future of the Antiquities Act, 21 J. Land Resources & Envtl. L. 619, 619 20 (2001) (describing the firestorm of protest that has greeted so many monument proclamations); James R. Rasband, Antiquities Act Monuments: The Elgin Marbles of Our Public Lands? in The Antiquities Act: A Century of Archaeology, Historic Preservation, and Nature Conservation 137 38 (David Harmon et al. eds., 2006) (describing this same pattern). 8 See, e.g., News Release, U.S. Senate Comm. on Energy & Natural Res., 28 Senators Introduce Bill to Reform Monument Designation Process (Jan. 5, 2017). 9 See, e.g., H.R. Con. Res. 12, 62d Leg., Gen. Sess. (Utah 2017) (concurrent resolution asking Utah s congressional delegation to support legislation to reduce or modify the boundaries of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument); H.R. Con. Res. 11, 62d Leg., Gen. Sess. (Utah 2017) (concurrent resolution requesting the President to undo the Bears Ears National Monument). 10 Maine Governor, Paul LePage, for example, asked President Trump to undo President Obama s proclamation of the Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument in Maine or to allow Maine to manage the monument in place of the National Park Service. See James B. Coffin ed., Think Tank Thinks Trump Has Authority to Undo Monuments, 42:7 Pub. Lands News 15, 16 (Apr. 7, 2017). New England fishermen filed suit objecting to President Obama s designation of the 4,913-square-mile Northeast Canyons and Seamounts National Marine Monument and filed suit challenging his authority to do so beyond the 12-mile territorial sea limit. Id. 11 See Lisa Riley Roche, Hatch Tells State Lawmakers Trump Looking at Bears Ears, Grand Staircase, Deseret News (Feb. 22, 2017); Juliet Eilperin, Trump Is Eager to Undo Sacred Tribal Monument, Says Orrin Hatch, Wash. Post (Jan. 27, 2017). 12 See Cheney Says Monuments Could Be Rescinded, Salt Lake Trib. (Aug. 25, 2000). 13 See infra notes 102 06 and accompanying text (discussing these diminishments).

21-4 Mineral Law Institute 21.01 On April 26, 2017, President Trump issued an executive order requiring the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a review of all monuments proclaimed since January 1, 1996, 14 with a focus on monuments over 100,000 acres. 15 This includes 27 national monuments encompassing 11.25 million acres of public land and 217.9 million acres of seabed. 16 The review, among other things, is to determine whether the original proclamations were made in accordance with the requirements and original objectives of the [Antiquities] Act and appropriately balance the protection of landmarks, structures, and objects against the appropriate use of Federal lands and the effects on surrounding lands and communities. 17 The order directs the Secretary to provide a final report to the President in 120 days and to issue an interim report within 45 days focusing on the Bears Ears National Monument. 18 The reports were to include recommendations for such Presidential actions, legislative proposals, or other actions consistent with law as the Secretary may consider appropriate to carry out the policy set forth in section 1 of this order. 19 Secretary Zinke has now recommended that the Bears Ears National Monument be reduced in size, although he 14 This date sweeps in all of the national monuments proclaimed during the Clinton administration, the first of which was the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument on September 18, 1996. See Proclamation No. 6920, 61 Fed. Reg. 50,223 (Sept. 18, 1996). Of all the Clinton-era monuments, this one has continued to draw the most fire. See, e.g., Benjamin Wood, Utah Senate Approves Call to Shrink Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, Salt Lake Trib. (Feb. 9, 2017) (reviewing state senators support for reviewing and possibly shrinking the monument). 15 Exec. Order No. 13,792, 82 Fed. Reg. 20,429 (Apr. 26, 2017) (requiring review of designations covering more than 100,000 acres and designations made without adequate public outreach and coordination with relevant stakeholders ). 16 See Press Release, U.S. Dep t of the Interior (DOI), Interior Department Releases List of Monuments Under Review, Announces First-Ever Formal Public Comment Period for Antiquities Act Monuments (May 5, 2017) (listing monuments under review). Some have questioned whether the Antiquities Act delegated authority to proclaim marine national monuments. The Act allows the president to declare as a monument landmarks, structures, and objects that are situated on land owned or controlled by the Federal Government.... 54 U.S.C. 320301(a). The question is whether the lands within the U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ) are really lands owned or controlled by the federal government as a result of federal regulatory control over the area. See John Yoo & Todd Gaziano, Am. Enter. Inst., Presidential Authority to Revoke or Reduce National Monument Designations, at 12 13 (Mar. 2017). But see Administration of Coral Reef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands, 24 Op. O.L.C. 183 (2000) (concluding that the president has the authority to proclaim a national monument in both the territorial sea 3 to 12 nautical miles from shore and in the EEZ 12 to 200 nautical miles from shore). 17 Exec. Order No. 13,792, 1. 18 Id. 2(d), (e). The interim report may also summarize findings on such other designations as the Secretary determines to be appropriate for inclusion.... Id. 2(d). 19 Id. 2(d), (e).

21.02 National Monument Designations 21-5 has indicated that further time is necessary to determine the contours of any reduction. 20 This chapter considers whether President Trump, or any president, has the authority to abolish, diminish, or modify prior national monument proclamations. Before addressing those questions, however, the chapter begins by outlining the basic distribution of authority over the public lands between Congress and the executive branch. Although Congress has essentially plenary power over public land law and policy, historically the president and executive branch have exercised a great deal of authority over the public lands, either as a result of congressional delegation or because of congressional acquiescence. Perhaps the most prominent example of power via delegation is the Antiquities Act. The chapter then considers whether the authority delegated to the president by Congress in the Antiquities Act is a one-way street or also includes the power to abolish or modify previously proclaimed national monuments. It also considers whether, even if the president lacks power to revoke or modify a prior withdrawal, a president can effectively undo monument proclamations by other means. 21.02 Executive Authority over the Public Lands The Property Clause of the U.S. Constitution allocates primary control over the public lands to Congress, giving it the power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States. 21 Thus, it is Congress, and not the executive, that controls public land policy, including decisions about whether to withdraw land from entry. 22 Congress may exercise its constitutional power to create a national park, a national forest, or a wilderness area. Alternatively, Congress can pass legislation such as the Antiquities Act or the withdrawal procedures under section 204 of the Federal Land 20 See Press Release, DOI, Secretary Zinke Submits 45-Day Interim Report on Bears Ears National Monument and Extends Public Comment Period (June 12, 2017). 21 U.S. Const. art. IV, 3, cl. 2. 22 Historically the term withdrawal has referred to the removal of land from the applicability of a particular disposition statute. Federal land, for example, might be withdrawn from entry for mineral exploration. A withdrawal does not decide the purpose for which the federal land will be used. It simply eliminates one potential use. Withdrawals are distinct from reservations, which occur when the government decides to retain public lands for a specified purpose, such as a national park. In practice distinguishing withdrawals from reservations has not always been easy. The broader the withdrawal, the more like a reservation the withdrawal looks. See generally Samuel Trask Dana & Sally K. Fairfax, Forest and Range Policy 29 30 (2d ed. 1980); see also 43 U.S.C. 1702(j) (FLPMA s definition of withdrawal ).

21-6 Mineral Law Institute 21.02 Policy and Management Act of 1976 (FLPMA) 23 delegating to the executive branch the authority to withdraw lands. 24 Congress, of course, can also reverse prior executive actions on the public lands. Historically, however, Congress has done so only infrequently, presumably because it has often approved of executive action but also partly because doing so requires overcoming various procedural hurdles. If the president who took the action is still in office, for example, Congress must pass any reversal by a veto-proof majority. Even when there is an administration of the same political party, a congressional opponent of the prior president s action must adduce a filibuster-proof majority of 60 votes in the Senate. Thus, changes in public land law and policy often result from executive action rather than congressional action. The result can be a tugof-war where notice-and-comment rulemaking, regulatory guidance, and land use planning cycle back and forth to reflect the competing priorities of different presidential administrations. 25 Contrary to the historical trend, the current Congress has been quite active in reversing President Obama s public land policies. It has done so by taking advantage of the Congressional Review Act (CRA), 26 which allows for circumvention of some of the procedural hurdles described above. Specifically, the CRA authorizes the House and Senate to pass a resolution by a simple majority repealing regulations issued in the last 60 legislative or session days of the House or Senate, respectively. 27 Prior to the Trump 23 43 U.S.C. 1701 1782. 24 For an overview of executive withdrawal authority, see John F. Shepherd & Shawn T. Welch, Public Land Withdrawals: The Age-Old Struggle Over Federal Land Management Policy Continues, 61 Rocky Mt. Min. L. Inst. 9-1 (2015); Susan M. Mathiascheck, Amy B. Chasanov & Dawn Miller, I m Still Standing: Future Public Land Withdrawals and Industry s Million-Acre Challenge, 59 Rocky Mt. Min. L. Inst. 23-1 (2013); Laura Lindley & Robert C. Mathes, Formal and De Facto Federal Land Withdrawals and Their Impacts on Oil and Gas and Mining Development in the Western States, 48 Rocky Mt. Min. L. Inst. 25-1 (2002); John F. Shepherd, Up the Grand Staircase: Executive Withdrawals and the Future of the Antiquities Act, 43 Rocky Mt. Min. L. Inst. 4-1 (1997); David H. Getches, Managing the Public Lands: The Authority of the Executive to Withdraw Lands, 22 Nat. Resources. J. 279 (1982); Charles F. Wheatley, Jr., Withdrawals Under the Federal Land Policy Management Act of 1976, 21 Ariz. L. Rev. 311 (1979). 25 See, e.g., Anne Joseph O Connell, Agency Rulemaking and Political Transitions, 105 Nw. U. L. Rev. 471 (2011); Robert L. Glicksman, Traveling in Opposite Directions: Roadless Area Management Under the Clinton and Bush Administrations, 34 Envtl. L. 1143 (2004); James Rasband et al., Natural Resources Law and Policy 1092 1118 (3d ed. 2016) (illustrating this phenomenon in the case of grazing regulation). 26 5 U.S.C. 801 808. 27 Id. 801(d)(1); see also Christopher M. Davis & Richard S. Beth, Agency Final Rules Submitted on or After June 13, 2016, May Be Subject to Disapproval by the 115th Congress, CRS Insight (Dec. 15, 2016) (calculating 60 legislative days).

21.02 National Monument Designations 21-7 administration, the CRA had been used just once, in 2001, at the start of the George W. Bush presidency to reverse a Clinton administration ergonomics rule. 28 The current Congress has now passed, and President Trump has signed, 14 resolutions reversing Obama administration regulations. 29 Among those resolutions is one reversing the Stream Protection Rule, 30 another reversing an Obama administration rule limiting hunting and fishing in national wildlife refuges in Alaska, 31 and a third reversing the Bureau of Land Management s (BLM) Planning 2.0 rule. 32 The CRA has proven to be a powerful tool. Not only does it allow Congress to avoid the normal procedural obstacles associated with passing legislation but it also forbids an agency from producing a new rule substantially like the old one. 33 Thus, future administrations will not be able to reverse regulatory course back to the overridden rule. In place of a regulatory tug-of-war, a CRA resolution locks in a regulatory framework until Congress itself decides to move in a different direction. The Trump administration s aggressive use of the CRA may well adjust the incentives 28 See Note, The Mysteries of the Congressional Review Act, 122 Harv. L. Rev. 2162, 2172 (2009) (discussing the reversal of a Clinton administration ergonomics rule). 29 See Ctr. for Progressive Reform, CRA by the Numbers, http://www.progressive reform.org/cra_numbers.cfm (listing all CRA resolutions signed by President Trump and also all CRA resolutions introduced in the 115th Congress). 30 See H.R.J. Res. 38, Pub. L. No. 115-5, 131 Stat. 10 (2017), reversing Stream Protection Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. 93,066 (Dec. 20, 2016). 31 See H.R.J. Res. 69, Pub. L. No. 115-20, 131 Stat. 86 (2017), reversing Non-Subsistence Take of Wildlife, and Public Participation and Closure Procedures, on National Wildlife Refuges in Alaska, 81 Fed. Reg. 52,248 (Aug. 5, 2016). 32 See H.R.J. Res. 44, Pub. L. No. 115-12, 131 Stat. 76 (2017), reversing Resource Management Planning, 81 Fed. Reg. 89,580 (Dec. 12, 2016); see also John C. Ruple, The Rise and Fall of Planning 2.0 and Other Developments in BLM Land Management Planning, 63 Rocky Mt. Min. L. Inst. 22-1 (2017). The Planning 2.0 rule, which was to be effective January 11, 2017, was designed to improve, among other things, the planning process by increasing public involvement early in the process, requiring consultation with Indian tribes during the preparation or amendment of a resource management plan, requiring use of high quality information, and increasing flexibility to determine the scope of relevant planning areas. See 81 Fed. Reg. at 89,580 81. Critics of the rule raised a variety of concerns but focused on the argument that the new rule would marginalize the role of state and local governments in the planning process, a role mandated by FLPMA. See 43 U.S.C. 1712(c)(9). 33 The Center for Biological Diversity has filed suit against the reversal of the rule regarding hunting and fishing in wildlife refuges in Alaska, arguing that the CRA is an unconstitutional violation of separation of powers principles, because it prevents a federal agency from carrying out its legal duty. See James B. Coffin ed., Enviros Challenge Constitutionality of Reg Reversals, 42:9 Pub. Lands News 9 (May 5, 2017); Complaint for Declaratory Relief, Ctr. for Biological Diversity v. Zinke, No. 3:17-cv-00091 (D. Alaska Apr. 20, 2017). This argument seems unlikely to succeed because it is Congress, by statute, that defines the scope of an agency s implementation of statutory language.

21-8 Mineral Law Institute 21.02 for end-of-term rulemaking and push midnight rules toward just prior to the CRA s 60-day window. This would at least obligate a subsequent administration looking to change course to go through notice-andcomment rulemaking. 34 Perhaps more importantly, it would avoid the risk that the regulatory pendulum would not be able to swing back without congressional intervention. Although the Property Clause allocates authority over the public lands to Congress, the executive branch has not always, or even generally, taken a narrow view of its own power over the public lands. Typically, it has not claimed inherent authority over public lands under Article II of the Constitution. 35 More often, the president and executive agencies have relied upon generous conceptions of congressional delegation. In some cases, as with the Antiquities Act, the president has expanded upon a congressional delegation of withdrawal authority. In other cases, the executive branch simply acted to withdraw public lands and then relied on congressional acquiescence. In its classic decision in United States v. Midwest Oil Co., the Supreme Court affirmed that congressional delegation could be found by virtue of congressional silence or acquiescence in prior executive withdrawals. 36 Midwest Oil considered whether the President had authority to withdraw lands from entry under the Oil Placer Act 37 and set them aside as a naval petroleum reserve. The Court concluded that congressional acquiescence in the President s withdrawal amounted to an implied delegation of withdrawal authority. 38 The Court s decision in Midwest Oil confirmed the validity of a range of prior executive withdrawals, including 99 Indian reservations and 44 bird refuges. The implied executive withdrawal authority recognized in Midwest Oil was augmented by congressional enactment of the 1910 Pickett Act that gave the president authority to withdraw public 34 It is noteworthy that one reason why the effort to use the CRA to reverse the Obama administration s rule limiting methane emissions from oil and gas production on the public lands failed by one vote in the Senate was Arizona Senator John McCain s concern that doing so would have made any regulation of methane waste difficult in the future. McCain believed it would be better for the DOI to issue a new rule. See Valerie Volcovici, Bid to Revoke Obama Methane Rule Fails in Surprise U.S. Senate Vote, Reuters (May 10, 2017). 35 But see United States v. Midwest Oil Co., 236 U.S. 459 (1915) (rejecting President William Howard Taft s argument for inherent withdrawal authority). 36 Id. at 481. 37 Act of Feb. 11, 1897, ch. 216, 29 Stat. 526. 38 Midwest Oil, 236 U.S. at 475.

21.02 National Monument Designations 21-9 lands from all uses except mineral entry for public purposes to be specified in the orders of withdrawals. 39 Using these various sources of authority, presidents and Secretaries of the Interior withdrew millions of acres of public lands from various forms of entry. 40 Among the various sources of executive authority, the Antiquities Act has probably been the most powerful tool for presidential preservation efforts. As initially enacted, the Antiquities Act was focused on allowing the president to make small withdrawals of public lands in order to protect prehistoric ruins and Indian artifacts. The following colloquy with Representative John F. Lacey, who chaired the House Committee on the Public Lands and sponsored the Act, illustrates this focus: Mr. STEPHENS of Texas. How much land will be taken off the market in the Western States by the passage of the bill? Mr. LACEY. Not very much. The bill provides that it shall be the smallest area necessary for the care and maintenance of the objects to be preserved. Mr. STEPHENS of Texas. Would it be anything like the forest-reserve bill, by which seventy or eighty million acres of land in the United States have been tied up? Mr. LACEY. Certainly not. The object is entirely different. It is to preserve these old objects of special interest and the Indian remains in the pueblos in the Southwest, whilst the other reserves the forests and the water courses. 41 Despite this focus, the Act also contained language that suggested a broader delegation of authority. As early as 1900, the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) had promoted versions of the Antiquities Act that would allow proclamations to protect areas for their scenic beauty, natural wonders or curiosities, ancient ruins or relics, or other objects of scientific or historic interest.... 42 While these DOI-sponsored bills were met with skepticism and never made it past the House Resources Committee, the version of the bill that became law in 1906 did retain the reference to objects of historic 39 Act of June 25, 1910, ch. 421, 1, 36 Stat. 847 (repealed 1976). 40 See generally Getches, supra note 24; 2 George Cameron Coggins & Robert L. Glicksman, Pub. Nat. Resources L. 14:10 (2d ed. 2017). 41 40 Cong. Rec. 7888 (June 5, 1906). For an examination of the legislative history of the Antiquities Act, see Getches, supra note 24, at 301 02; Shepherd, supra note 24, at 4-8 to 4-13; Ronald F. Lee, The Antiquities Act of 1906 (Nat l Park Serv. 1970). 42 Mark Squillace, The Monumental Legacy of the Antiquities Act of 1906, 37 Ga. L. Rev. 473, 480 (2003) (quoting H.R. 11021, 58th Cong. 1 (1900)); see also Lee, supra note 41.

21-10 Mineral Law Institute 21.02 or scientific interest. 43 Thus, it is perhaps not surprising that, as soon as it was enacted, presidents relied on this language in the Act to accomplish much larger withdrawals. Within two years, President Theodore Roosevelt had proclaimed 11 national monuments, including 800,000 acres as the Grand Canyon National Monument, most often pointing to the Act s scientific interest language to justify the withdrawal. 44 Since its enactment in 1906, presidents have used the Antiquities Act 157 times to proclaim national monuments. 45 The conservation track record of the Antiquities Act must also be weighed in light of the fact that there has never been a successful legal challenge to any presidential use of the Act. 46 The broad withdrawal authority exercised by the executive branch has generated significant tension over the years. Those whose interests were negatively impacted by such withdrawals argued that it was Congress, and not the executive, that should be the primary arbiter of what uses were allowed on the public lands. After all, they said, the Property Clause gives Congress the power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States. 47 Proponents of executive authority, on the other hand, argued that the executive and its land management agencies were better situated to act quickly to preserve the public interest in the public lands and that Congress could always reverse executive withdrawals if it chose to do so. When Congress passed FLPMA in 1976, it attempted to deal with this conflict. It did so by repealing portions of the Pickett Act and 29 other statutes granting executive withdrawal authority, as well as by specifically rejecting the 43 54 U.S.C. 320301; see Lee, supra note 41 (detailing this legislative history and the competition between the DOI and the Bureau of American Ethnology of the Smithsonian Institution to have supervision of the monuments that would be proclaimed, with the former focused on national park-type monuments and the latter focused more narrowly on antiquities). 44 See Shepherd, supra note 24, at 4-14 n.57; see also Proclamation No. 794, 35 Stat. 2175 (1908) (proclaiming the Grand Canyon as a national monument). In Cameron v. United States, the Supreme Court agreed that the Grand Canyon was appropriately deemed an object of scientific interest. 252 U.S. 450, 455 (1920). 45 See Nat l Parks Conservation Ass n, supra note 6 (providing download link for detailed list of all monuments, including enlargements and diminishments by date, as well as total acres affected). 46 See James R. Rasband, Utah s Grand Staircase: The Right Path to Wilderness Preservation? 70 U. Colo. L. Rev. 483, 501 04 (1999) (discussing court decisions through 1999 rejecting challenges to various monuments); see also Tulare Cnty. v. Bush, 306 F.3d 1138, 1142 (D.C. Cir. 2001) (rejecting a challenge to Giant Sequoia National Monument); Mountain States Legal Found. v. Bush, 306 F.3d 1132, 1138 (D.C. Cir. 2002) (rejecting challenges to six national monuments). 47 U.S. Const. art. IV, 3, cl. 2.

21.03 National Monument Designations 21-11 president s implied withdrawal authority under Midwest Oil. 48 Congress, however, left untouched the president s authority to create national monuments under the Antiquities Act. It also enacted, in section 204 of FLPMA, elaborate procedures under which the Secretary of the Interior could withdraw public lands subject to congressional veto. 49 21.03 Can Monuments Be Abolished or Modified? As described above, the Antiquities Act authorizes the president, in his discretion, to declare by public proclamation historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest that are situated on land owned or controlled by the Federal Government to be national monuments. 50 Because proclamations are functionally the same as an executive order, 51 and because presidents routinely revoke the executive orders of a prior president, 52 at first blush it may seem obvious that a president can revoke a prior president s proclamation of a national monument. But unlike most executive orders, which direct executive branch subordinates to take a particular action, the proclamation of a national monument is done as a result of a statutory delegation. Thus, the scope of executive authority depends primarily on the authority delegated by Congress to the president. In simple terms, does the Antiquities Act provide for a one-way delegation to create monuments, with Congress retaining for itself the sole authority to revoke, diminish, or modify a monument? Most of the commentators who have written about whether a president has authority to revoke a monument have concluded the president lacks 48 See FLPMA 704(a), 90 Stat. at 2792. 49 See 43 U.S.C. 1714 (providing different procedures for emergency withdrawals of up to three years, withdrawals of less than 5,000 acres, and withdrawals of more than 5,000 acres for up to 20 years). 50 54 U.S.C. 320301(a). 51 See John Contrubis, Cong. Research Serv., Executive Orders and Proclamations, at 1 2 (CRS Report 95-772 A, updated Mar. 9, 1999) (noting that the difference between executive orders and proclamations is one of form rather than substance). 52 President Trump, for example, issued an executive order directing the Secretary of the Interior to terminate the coal leasing moratorium declared by former Secretary Sally Jewell. See Exec. Order No. 13,783, 6. As another example of the standard executive order tug-ofwar between successive administrations, right after he took office, President Trump issued an executive order blocking foreign aid or federal funding for international nongovernmental organizations that provide or promote abortions; this reversed an executive order from President Obama, which, in turn, had reversed President George W. Bush s executive order. See Jessie Hellmann, Trump Reinstates Ban on US Funding for Abortions Overseas, The Hill (Jan. 23, 2017).

21-12 Mineral Law Institute 21.03 the power to do so. 53 I reached this same conclusion when I considered this issue in 2001, 54 and it remains my best judgment, setting aside the fairly unique situation of President Obama s expansion of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument to include approximately 40,400 acres of land set aside under the Oregon and California Revested Lands Act of 1937 (O&C Act), 55 which required that the lands be managed for sustained yield of their timber. 56 For reasons described below, I also continue in my view that a president likely has the power to modify or reduce a prior national monument proclamation. My prior analysis, and that of other commentators, focused on Congress s intent as reflected in the Antiquities Act. This is surely the proper touchstone but, in reconsidering this question, I have found it instructive to look at the Act through the lens the Supreme Court has employed to consider executive power more generally the framework first set forth by Justice Robert Jackson in his famous concurrence in Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 57 also known as the Steel Seizure case. 53 See Squillace, supra note 42, at 555; see also Albert C. Lin, Clinton s National Monuments: A Democrat s Undemocratic Acts? 29 Ecology L.Q. 707, 711 12 (2002); Pamela Baldwin, Cong. Research Serv., Authority of a President to Modify or Eliminate a National Monument, at 3 5 (CRS Report RS20647 Aug. 3, 2000). 54 James R. Rasband, The Future of the Antiquities Act, 21 J. Land Resources & Envtl. L. 619, 624 29 (2001). 5543 U.S.C. 2601 2605 (also known as the Oregon and California Sustained Yield Act). 56 See Proclamation No. 9564, 82 Fed. Reg. 6145 (Jan. 12, 2017). Including the O&C Act lands in the expansion has been challenged by the Association of O&C Counties. See Complaint, Ass n of O&C Counties v. Trump, No. 1:17-cv-00280 (D.D.C. Feb. 13, 2017). The propriety of the President s action is beyond the scope of this chapter, but the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has previously held that exempting timber resources to serve as wildlife habitat was inconsistent with the principle of sustained yield. Headwaters, Inc. v. BLM, 914 F.2d 1174, 1183 (9th Cir. 1990). Proponents of the expansion have pointed out that subsequent to the Headwaters decision, however, the Ninth Circuit has found that environmental laws are applicable to O&C Act lands, even if such laws require a limitation on timber production. See Portland Audubon Soc y v. Babbitt, 998 F.2d 705, 709 (9th Cir. 1992) (deciding that O&C Act lands were subject to NEPA); Seattle Audubon Soc y v. Lyons, 871 F. Supp. 1291, 1313 14 (W.D. Wash. 1994) (finding O&C Act lands subject to the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA)); see also Michael C. Blumm, Opinion, Oregon s Monuments Need Protection from Logging, High Country News (May 4, 2017). This argument seems stronger for statutes passed after the O&C Act rather than before, as was the case with the Antiquities Act. Moreover, in contrast to the ESA, the Antiquities Act permits but does not command preservation. Thus, it is harder to discern congressional intent, or acquiescence, to override the purposes of the O&C Act. 57 343 U.S. 579 (1952).

21.03[1] National Monument Designations 21-13 [1] The Test for Presidential Executive Orders: The Youngstown Framework The Youngstown case arose when President Harry Truman attempted to seize domestic steel mills that were subject to labor strikes during the Korean War. 58 A majority of justices agreed that President Truman lacked authority to do so but Justice Jackson s concurring opinion provided the test that future courts would employ. 59 He wrote: Presidential powers are not fixed but fluctuate, depending on their disjunction or conjunction with those of Congress. 60 He then laid out a tripartite framework for considering appropriate deference to presidential action: 1. When the President acts pursuant to an express or implied authorization of Congress, his authority is at its maximum, for it includes all that he possesses in his own right plus all that Congress can delegate. In these circumstances, and in these only, may he be said (for what it may be worth), to personify the federal sovereignty. If his act is held unconstitutional under these circumstances, it usually means that the Federal Government as an undivided whole lacks power.... 2. When the President acts in absence of either a congressional grant or denial of authority, he can only rely upon his own independent powers, but there is a zone of twilight in which he and Congress may have concurrent authority, or in which its distribution is uncertain. Therefore, congressional inertia, indifference or quiescence may sometimes, at least as a practical matter, enable, if not invite, measures on independent presidential responsibility.... 3. When the President takes measures incompatible with the expressed or implied will of Congress, his power is at its lowest ebb, for then he can rely only upon his own constitutional powers minus any constitutional powers of Congress over the matter.... Presidential claim to a power at once so conclusive and preclusive must be scrutinized with caution, for what is at stake is the equilibrium established by our constitutional system. 61 As discussed below, categories one and three of this Youngstown framework require an analysis of congressional intent. Category two with its twilight metaphor is more elusive. In all three categories, however, implying congressional intent through indifference or acquiescence is a key factor that has received insufficient consideration in commentary about the propriety of an abolition, reduction, or modification of an existing national monument. 58 Id. at 583. 59 See Dames & Moore v. Regan, 453 U.S. 654 (1981); Medellin v. Texas, 552 U.S. 491, 525 (2008); Zivotofsky v. Kerry, 135 S. Ct. 2076, 2083 (2015) ( In considering claims of Presidential power this Court refers to Justice Jackson s familiar tripartite framework from Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer. (citation omitted)). 60 Youngstown, 342 U.S. at 635 (Jackson, J., concurring). 61 Id. at 635 38 (footnote omitted).

21-14 Mineral Law Institute 21.03[2] [2] Did Congress Expressly or Impliedly Delegate to the President the Authority to Revoke National Monuments? Justice Jackson s first category invites consideration of whether the Antiquities Act expressly or impliedly gives the president authority to revoke or modify a monument. His third category is the flip side of this question: Did Congress expressly or impliedly disable the president from doing so? On its face, 62 the Antiquities Act contains no explicit authorization to revoke an existing monument. Nor does the Act expressly prohibit revocation. Despite the absence of any express authority to abolish a monument, a president could argue that the authority to proclaim a monument must include the authority to return the land to its status quo prior to becoming a monument because the greater power necessarily includes the lesser. 63 However, in several other turn-of-the-century statutes delegating withdrawal power to the president, Congress specifically included a provision allowing the president or the Secretary of the Interior to revoke a prior withdrawal. For example, the Pickett Act gave the president authority to temporarily withdraw public lands but also provided that those withdrawals were to remain in force until revoked by him or an Act of Congress. 64 Similar revocation provisions exist in the Carey Act of 1894 65 62 The first two sections of the Act are most pertinent: (a) Presidential declaration. The President may, in the President s discretion, declare by public proclamation historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest that are situated on land owned or controlled by the Federal Government to be national monuments. (b) Reservation of land. The President may reserve parcels of land as a part of the national monuments. The limits of the parcels shall be confined to the smallest area compatible with the proper care and management of the objects to be protected. 54 U.S.C. 320301. 63 See, e.g., W. Union Tel. Co. v. Kansas ex rel. Coleman, 216 U.S. 1, 53 (1910) (Holmes, J., dissenting) ( Even in the law the whole generally includes its parts. If the state may prohibit, it may prohibit with the privilege of avoiding the prohibition in a certain way. ); Michael Herz, Justice Byron White and the Argument that the Greater Includes the Lesser, 1994 BYU L. Rev. 227, 227 (discussing the tremendously attractive greater-lesser argument in the context of its usage by Justice White). 64 Act of June 25, 1910, ch. 421, 1, 36 Stat. 847 (repealed 1976). Another reading of this Pickett Act language is that Congress was simply stating its understanding of existing authority. There would have been no other reason for stating that withdrawals remained in force until an Act of Congress because that was unquestionably true and thus the same might be said of the recitation of the revocation power of the president. 65 43 U.S.C. 641 ( [T]he Secretary of Interior with the approval of the President is... authorized and empowered... to contract and agree... with each of the States... binding

21.03[2] National Monument Designations 21-15 and the Reclamation Act of 1902. 66 If Congress understood the authority to withdraw to contain the implied authority to revoke, the revocation permission in these other statutes would have been mere surplusage. The language of these Acts thus indicates that Congress knew what to say if it wanted to give the president authority to revoke one of his own withdrawals, and it did not say it in the Antiquities Act. 67 The existence of these other statutes granting revocation authority was one of the key drivers of Attorney General Homer Cummings s 1938 Attorney General Opinion that addressed a proposal to abolish the Castle Pinckney National Monument. 68 Cummings opined that, if Congress wanted to grant the president authority to revoke a monument, it would have expressly done so within the statute. 69 In addition to the Pickett Act, Carey Act, and Reclamation Act cited above, 70 Cummings noted that the Forest Service Organic Administration Act of 1897 provided that the president was authorized to modify any Executive order establishing any forest reserve by reducing its area or by vacating it altogether. 71 In Cummings s view, which is not binding on the president, 72 Congress s failure (or its affirmative decision) in the Antiquities Act not to grant the president the United States to donate, grant, and patent to the State... desert lands... and if certain conditions are not met the Secretary of the Interior, in his discretion, may restore such lands to the public domain.... (emphasis added)). 66 Ch. 1093, 3, 32 Stat. 388, 388 ( [T]he Secretary of Interior shall... withdraw from public entry the lands required for any irrigation works... and shall restore to public entry any of the lands so withdrawn when, in his judgment, such lands are not required for the purposes of this Act. (emphasis added)). This provision is codified as amended at 43 U.S.C. 416. 67 Rasband, supra note 54, at 625 27 (reviewing these statutes). 68 Proposed Abolishment of Castle Pinckney National Monument, 39 Op. Att y Gen. 185, 188 (1938) (1938 AG Opinion). 69 Id. 70 See 21.03[2], supra. 71 1938 AG Opinion, supra note 68, at 188 (emphasis added); see 16 U.S.C. 473 (authorizing the president to revoke, modify, or suspend any and all Executive orders and proclamations establishing national forests). 72 See Michael Herz, Imposing Unified Executive Branch Statutory Interpretation, 15 Cardozo L. Rev. 219, 228 (1993) ( Certainly the President may ignore that advice indeed, the combination of the Take Care Clause and the oath of office may obligate him to reject advice with which he disagrees. (emphasis omitted) (footnotes omitted)); Trevor W. Morrison, Stare Decisis in the Office of Legal Counsel, 110 Colum. L. Rev. 1448 (2010) (reaching same conclusion).

21-16 Mineral Law Institute 21.03[2] similar authority to revoke a monument is best read as congressional intent that the president have only the authority to create monuments. 73 Although Cummings s view has been seconded by most scholarly commentary, a recent article suggested that the president has authority to revoke a monument. 74 The commentators, who make several arguments, assert the Antiquities Act s legislative history shows that the primary purpose of the Act was to provide a power to the president to prevent the destruction and looting of artifacts until they were excavated and safeguarded or until Congress could consider long-term measures regarding the site. 75 Thus, they say, a later president could reasonably conclude that Congress declined the opportunity to legislate on the land or objects in an earlier monument designation or that they were now safeguarded, such as by excavation and display in a museum. 76 However, it seems equally plausible to read congressional silence (or congressional failure to revoke) as approval of a monument or as satisfaction with the protection afforded to the designated objects. The commentators also argue in favor of a general principle that the authority to execute a discretionary government power usually includes the power to revoke it unless the original grant expressly limits the power of revocation. 77 As an example of this principle, they note that a statute giving an agency authority to promulgate regulations is presumed to include the authority to repeal and change those regulations, particularly if the regulation is contrary to statutory intent. 78 They also observe that, although Article I, Section 7 of the Constitution provides only the process for enacting a statute, the power to repeal a statute is necessarily concomitant. 79 Similarly, Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution sets forth a process 73 In reaching his conclusion, Cummings relied in part on an Attorney General Opinion offered in 1862, which reviewed President Abraham Lincoln s reservation of a military fort in Illinois pursuant to an 1809 statute. See 1938 AG Opinion, supra note 68, at 187 ( A duty properly performed by the Executive under statutory authority has the validity and sanctity which belong to the statute itself, and, unless it be within the terms of the power conferred by that statute, the Executive can no more destroy his own authorized work, without some other legislative sanction, than any other person can. (quoting Rock Island Military Reservation, 10 Op. Atty. Gen. 359, 364 (1862))). 74 See Yoo & Gaziano, supra note 16. 75 Id. at 7. 76 Id. 77 Id. 78 Id. at 7 8. 79 Id. at 8.

21.03[3][a] National Monument Designations 21-17 by which the president can nominate and, with the advice and consent of the Senate, appoint judges, ambassadors, and certain executive branch officials; yet the Constitution does not address the removal of such officers by the president. The power to revoke an appointment is presumed. 80 The latter two examples of implied authority to revoke are distinguishable because the power to repeal a statute or remove an appointed officer would not exist if not implied; whereas in the case of the Antiquities Act, the power of the president is delegated by Congress and there is no question Congress itself retains the authority to revoke a monument. 81 The implied continuing authority to modify regulations to fulfill statutory purposes is closer to the mark but does not account for the fact that Congress chose to include revocation authority in other public land statutes from the same era. 82 On balance, the most plausible interpretation of the Antiquities Act is that Congress did not intend to give the president authority to revoke a national monument. [3] Did Congress Expressly or Impliedly Delegate to the President the Authority to Modify or Diminish National Monuments? Although Congress may not have granted a president authority to revoke a monument, the president would be on a firmer foundation if he diminished or modified a monument. [a] Does the Antiquities Act Expressly Delegate the Authority to Diminish a Monument s Size? In the case of reductions in a monument s size, one interpretation of the Antiquities Act is that Congress expressly delegated such modification authority to the president. As noted above, the Antiquities Act provides that the parcels of land reserved in a proclamation shall be confined to the smallest area compatible with the proper care and management of the objects to be protected. 83 In his 1938 Attorney General Opinion, Homer Cummings suggested this language allows the president to shrink an existing monument down to the smallest area needed to protect the objects 80 Id. at 9. 81 Congress has terminated a number of national monuments. See, e.g., Act of May 17, 1954, ch. 203, 68 Stat. 98 (Shoshone Cavern); Act of Apr. 7, 1930, ch. 107, 46 Stat. 142 (Papago Saguaro); Act of Mar. 29, 1956, ch. 104, 70 Stat. 61 (Castle Pinckney); Act of Aug. 3, 1950, ch. 530, 64 Stat. 404 (Holy Cross). 82 See supra notes 64 66 and accompanying text (discussing these statutes). 83 54 U.S.C. 320301(b).

21-18 Mineral Law Institute 21.03[3][a] listed in the proclamation. 84 This interpretation finds some support in the legislative history of the Antiquities Act. As discussed previously, there is substantial evidence in the Act s legislative history that the Act was originally focused on allowing monuments to encompass only small tracts of public land. 85 Despite this history, it is unclear whether the smallest area compatible language creates a continuing, as opposed to a one-time, duty to consider whether less acreage would be sufficient to fulfill the Antiquities Act s protective purpose. Moreover, in the case of landscape-level monuments, the proclamations are careful to describe in sweeping terms the objects of historic or scientific interest to be protected. The beautifully written Bears Ears National Monument proclamation, for example, refers to the land, the landscape, the area s stunning geology, the paleontological resources, the diversity of the soils, and the wonders of the region from earth to sky. 86 Recall that the Antiquities Act separates the power to designate structures... and other objects 87 from the power to reserve the land necessary to protect the objects. 88 In the case of landscape-level monuments, like Bears Ears, however, the object to be protected includes the very acreage proclaimed as a monument. Thus, even if the Act expressly permits 84 See 1938 AG Opinion, supra note 68, at 188; see also National Monuments, 60 Interior Dec. 9, 10 (1947) (opining that a president has the power to reduce the size of a monument because of the requirement in the Antiquities Act that monuments be confined to the smallest area compatible with the proper care and management of the objects to be protected (quoting 16 U.S.C. 431 (now 54 U.S.C. 320301)). But see Squillace, supra note 42, at 555 (the language of the Antiquities Act cannot rightfully be construed to authorize a future President to diminish the size of a monument because an original monument proclamation, by definition, represents the judgment of a president that the area protected is the smallest area compatible with the proper care and management of the protected objects. Otherwise the proclamation would be invalid on its face. (footnote omitted) (quoting 1938 AG Opinion, supra note 68, at 188)). 85 See supra notes 41 43 and accompanying text (discussing the legislative history); see also Squillace, supra note 42, at 484; Kelly Y. Fanizzo, Separation of Powers and Federal Land Management: Enforcing the Direction of the President Under the Antiquities Act, 40 Envtl. L. 765, 823 24 (2010). 86 Proclamation No. 9558, 82 Fed. Reg. 1139 (Dec. 28, 2016). 87 54 U.S.C. 320301(a). 88 Id. 320301(b). Section 320301(b) does not even require the president to reserve any land to protect an object of historic or scientific interest but only indicates that the president may reserve parcels of land as a part of the national monuments. Id. (emphasis added). The discretionary may also suggests some authority to remove parcels when they are not necessary to protect the identified objects. See generally Yoo & Gaziano, supra note 16 (making this argument). Again, if the parcel is essentially the object, this argument is more challenging.